EP0038770A1 - Verpackungstyp für Schuhe - Google Patents

Verpackungstyp für Schuhe Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0038770A1
EP0038770A1 EP81450005A EP81450005A EP0038770A1 EP 0038770 A1 EP0038770 A1 EP 0038770A1 EP 81450005 A EP81450005 A EP 81450005A EP 81450005 A EP81450005 A EP 81450005A EP 0038770 A1 EP0038770 A1 EP 0038770A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
blister
packaging according
packaging
footwear
covering element
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP81450005A
Other languages
English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Claude Bernard Courty
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from FR8008346A external-priority patent/FR2480249A1/fr
Priority claimed from FR8022343A external-priority patent/FR2491887A2/fr
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of EP0038770A1 publication Critical patent/EP0038770A1/de
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D85/00Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials
    • B65D85/18Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for wearing apparel, headwear or footwear
    • B65D85/187Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for wearing apparel, headwear or footwear for footwear

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a new type of packaging, in particular for shoes, capable of playing simultaneously several roles and in particular a role of protection and packaging, a role of presentation in points of sale and a role of storage at the user.
  • shoes are generally delivered in cardboard boxes. These boxes, sometimes refused by buyers, are often thrown away because they are inconvenient and bulky. In other cases, they are kept for storage of the shoes, by stacking.
  • the present invention aims to overcome these drawbacks by proposing a new method of packaging footwear directly usable at the end of manufacture, allowing storage and presentation at points of sale and more attractive and practical for buyers than the traditional box. cardboard-based.
  • the subject of the invention is a packaging for footwear, characterized in that it comprises: a flat bottom, of relatively thin thickness, to which the sole of the footwear or items is applied and provided with means 'hooking or fixing: one or two compartments, housings or the like with a rigid or flexible wall comprising an opening allowing threading of the footwear and a thin-walled element for total or partial covering of the assembly thus formed and delimiting the outline d 'A substantially parallelepipedal volume enveloping said assembly so as to simultaneously constitute a protective packaging, a display and a storage in particular for storage at the user.
  • each of the three essential elements plays a predominant particular role contributing to give the entire packaging its polyfunction allowing to fulfill all roles of packaging, protection, storage , presentation and storage during the life of a pair of shoes from its manufacture to the user.
  • the bottom is the support for holding, presenting and storing, in particular by hanging or fixing to a vertical wall.
  • the housings serve as a receptacle for shoes and participate in presentation and storage by facilitating the view and handling.
  • the covering element more particularly ensures the packaging-protection function ensuring storage.
  • the packaging shown in FIG. 1 comprises a flat bottom 1 of relatively thin thickness, rigid, semi-rigid or flexible and made of any suitable material (cardboard, leather, plastic, with or without coating).
  • compartments 2 intended to serve as housing for receiving a pair of shoes for example.
  • These compartments 2 are produced for example using coated or uncoated fabrics, plastics, rubber, leather with interior lining or not, attached to the bottom 1 and fixed by any suitable means such as gluing, welding, stitching, stapling, etc. ...
  • the compartments 2 form kinds of pockets open at the top to allow engagement of the shoes and open or notched or not at the bottom.
  • the bottom 1 of FIG. 1 is provided at its upper part with two eyelets 3 for hanging, for example on the reverse of cabinet doors, cupboards, wardrobes or along walls and partitions to allow shoe storage at the user's place.
  • the bottom 1 is extended at its upper part by a flap 4 which can be folded down around a fold line 5.
  • Fig. 2 illustrates an alternative embodiment in which the bottom is divided into two parts 1a and 16 each provided with a shoe housing 2, hooking eyelets 3 and a flap 4a, 4b which can be folded down.
  • Fig. 3 illustrates an alternative embodiment in which the bottom 1 does not have a foldable upper flap and the shoe compartments are constituted by straps or straps 6 arranged in parallel and attached to the bottom so as to match the upper of the shoes.
  • the packaging of the invention comprises, on the one hand, a flat bottom provided with one or two shoe compartments and, on the other hand, a covering element delimiting the outline of a volume substantially parallelepiped wrapping all or part of the assembly so as to simultaneously constitute a packaging, protection, storage or even a display and storage in particular for storage at the user.
  • the cover element in question is not shown in Figs. 1 to 3. It may be a traditional cardboard box f Ai- health office of packaging for shipment at the manufacturing of footwear and storage at the distribution, so that the packaging shown in Fig. 1 to 3 once removed from its box, can serve as a display in points of sale and storage at the user.
  • a blister 7 as shown in FIG. 4, that is to say a parallelepiped of semi-rigid transparent material open on one side and secured to the bottom 1 for example by engagement, at the bottom of the bottom 1, of legs 8 in holes 9 made in the blister 7 and by fixing to the upper part by any appropriate means.
  • the blister 7 may have a flange 10 which comes to bear against the bottom 1 and is fixed there by means of pins 11 cooperating with the holes 3.
  • this assembly is easily portable since it is provided with a handle 12 shaped in the bottom 1.
  • the packaging assembly of FIG. 4 can thus fulfill all the functions of packaging, protection, storage, presentation and storage during the life of a pair of shoes from its manufacture to the user.
  • the blister 7 is either left in place (the assembly is carried out by the handle 12) or removed, while the storage function is provided by the only bottom 1 with its pockets 2 for shoes, the bottom being put in place using - holes 3 or the handle 12.
  • Fig. 5 illustrates another embodiment of the covering element which is constituted here by a cardboard box 13 with opening by the end or bell box.
  • Fig. 6 shows another bell-shaped box 14 of substantially square section and receiving a bottom 1, divided into two parts 1a, 1b folded one against the other around a center fold line 15 so that the two shoes are inserted into the box 14 sole against sole.
  • the two parts 1a, 1b are separable or not and suspended to ensure the storage function together or individually.
  • FIG. 7 it is a so-called fitted cardboard box.
  • the bottom 16 of this box is the equivalent of the bottom 1 of the packaging of FIGS. 1 to 6 and is provided with 2 shoe compartments.
  • the lateral side 17 (heel side) of the box is folded down to allow the fitting and removal of the shoes in the box.
  • the storage function consists of the bottom 16, after removing the sides and the cover, holes or similar attachment, suspension or fixing elements being provided in said bottom 16.
  • Fig. 8 shows an alternative embodiment of the packaging of FIG. 7 according to which the support on which the shoe compartments are attached consists of the two longitudinal sides 17 and 18 of a traditional fitted cardboard box.
  • Each side has a housing and can be detached from the rest of the box to be hung, suspended or otherwise fixed to be used for storing shoes.
  • the two sides 17 and 18 are foldable to allow the insertion or extraction of the shoes.
  • the cover keeps the sides of the box vertical.
  • Fig. 9 illustrates another embodiment according to which the shoe compartments 2 ′ are delimited inside a cardboard box with an end opening partitioned internally into two parts by a partition 19.
  • the cover 20 is either independent of the body of the box, either articulated on it as shown in 20 'in dashed lines.
  • the box with its interior arrangement constitutes both the shoe receptacle and the covering element serving as packaging and protection.
  • Fig. 10 illustrates a more elaborate version in which the shoe compartments 2 are formed in a semi-rigid and transparent shell forming a blister 21.
  • This blister 21 is attached to a flat bottom 22 provided with holes 3 for subsequent storage at the user's place and a central hole 23 for the passage of a hanging rod for example for the presentation or the exhibition for sale.
  • the partition wall of the two housings 2 is constituted, for example, by an initiation of interior withdrawal symbolized in 2 hours.
  • Above the housings are made in the blister 21 two small separate shells 25 enveloping the heels of the shoes.
  • the two shells 25 are foldable around a fold line 26 to allow the insertion and extraction of the shoes.
  • the fold line 26 is constituted for example by a weakening zone of the wall of the blister 21.
  • the small shells 25 can be removed. Furthermore, these shells 25 can be replaced by a single shell.
  • the packaging shown in Figs. 11 to 14 includes a flat element 30 on which the soles of a pair of shoes bear, for example, symbolized at 31 in FIG. 13, and a shoe covering element 32 constituted by a blister or the like.
  • This blister 32 made of a semi-rigid transparent thermoplastic material, is shaped so as to delimit two separate housings 33 and 34 whose general shape conforms only to the outline of the shoes.
  • the two housings 33 and 34 are separated by an interval 35 which allows better lateral wedging of the shoes in their compartment. As can be seen in Figs. 11 and 13 the interval 35 does not extend to the bottom 30 except at the front of the packaging where a hole 36 is provided in the bottom 30 for the passage of a suspension bar for storage-presentation purposes shoes thus conditioned.
  • the bottom 30 is constituted for example by a sheet or plate of cardboard fixed at one end to the blister 32, for example by staples 37 engaged in a peripheral flat edge 38 of the blister.
  • the bottom 30 is divided into two parts separated by a crease or weakening line 39 parallel to one of the edges of the bottom and allowing folding.
  • One of the parts 40, fixed relative to the bottom 30, is held by said staples 37 and the other part 41 is movable and secured to the blister in the closed position by clipping using internal bosses 42 made in the edge folded 43 of the blister.
  • the bottom 30 further comprises windows 44 allowing direct labeling on the soles of the shoes and reading the price, references and size without having to open the packaging.
  • grooves 45 are advantageously made on part of the side walls.
  • interior protuberances such as those shown schematically in dashed lines at 46 (Fig. 13 and 14) are provided on the sides of the housings 33 and 34 in order to contribute to the lateral and longitudinal elastic wedging of the shoes.
  • These protrusions 46 can form an integral part of the internal grooves 45.
  • bosses such as those shown in dashed lines at 47 in FIG. 13 are provided on the bottom 30.
  • These bosses 47 which are preferably elastic and whose contour has the shape, for example, of a sole, ensure a play take-up allowing, in cooperation with the lateral protrusions 46, good wedging of the shoes, the same packaging can thus accommodate different sizes (three for example) which avoids multiplying the sizes of packaging.
  • a line of least resistance or of marking 48 is provided on the rear ends of the housings 33 and 34.
  • This line 48 drawn at an angle, is cut by the user of the packaging in order to remove the two parts 49 of the blister, in line with the rear ends of the shoes with a view to removing them from the packaging and replacing them in the home storage function of the packaging, the latter being placed vertically, the bottom 30 against a wall, a door back, etc. ... and fixed permanently with the open end of the blister at the top.
  • the advantage of the movable bottom 30 is to allow the extraction of the shoes for their fitting without having to deteriorate the packaging.
  • the bottom part 41 (Fig. 14) is gripped by introducing a finger into the hole 36 and pulling outwards.
  • the hole 36 made in the bottom 30 is of course opposite a hole made in the wall of the blister, which is pressed there on the inner face of the bottom.
  • the suspension of such packaging from a display rod for sale and its handling in situ do not risk damaging the bottom 30, particularly when it is made of cardboard.
  • the hole formed in the blister 32 opposite the hole 36 is ovalized in the direction of the center of the packaging.
  • the finger can catch the internal face of the rim 30 and move the latter away from the blister.
  • the bottom 30 cannot be separated from the blister, which avoids bringing a bottom from another origin onto a blister. There is thus a perfect unity, in particular from the advertising point of view between the shoes, the blister and the bottom, the latter two advantageously constituting particularly attractive and efficient advertising media, the effects of which extend to the user even beyond the duration of use of the shoes.
  • the whole of blister 32 with its protuberances, bosses and c corrugations, is advantageously by thermoforming allowing high throughput and lower production costs because of your f or- possible series.
  • the packaging of FIG. It can have a bottom made in several ways. It may be a cardboard, plastic or similar background, attached to the blister by stapling, gluing, welding or otherwise. It may also be a plastic bottom integral with the blister, the two parts of the packaging being produced simultaneously by a single thermoforming operation and articulated together. Such an operation has the advantage of not requiring the user recovery operations to mount and fix the funds on the blisters.
  • the bottom 30 can also be produced with its bosses 47 by thermoforming a sheet of plastic material.
  • the bottom 30 and / or the periphery of the blister 32 have hooking members (holes, pilot holes) not shown, allowing the packaging to be hooked to make it play its storage function for the user.
  • the packaging is for this purpose placed vertically against a wall, a back of a door, cupboard etc ... the point of the shoe is obviously directed downwards.
  • the packaging of FIG. 11 may be provided with one or two handles, either attached to the packaging, receiving members such as holes, or fixing devices being provided for this purpose, or conformed directly in the blister and / or the bottom to one of the ends of the packaging.
  • the fold line 39 of the packaging of FIG. 12 could be offset by 90 ° and arranged in the vicinity of the median axis of the bottom 30 which would allow access for fitting to only one of the shoes, the other remaining trapped due to the connection of the blister and the fixed part 40 from the bottom.
  • Fig. 15 illustrates an alternative embodiment of the packaging of FIG. 11 by thermoforming in a single operation of the blister-bottom assembly.
  • the packaging of FIG. 15 has the general shape of a case comprising two integral parts articulated one on the other, namely a part 50 forming a blister and a part 51 forming a bottom, the two parts 50, 51 being provided with carrying handles 52, 53 overlapping one another when the packaging is closed.
  • handles 52, 53 have on their inner periphery, in the central zone, a notch intended to ensure the correct centering of the assembly in suspension on a display rod threaded into said handles.
  • the part 50 has the general shape of the blister 32 of FIG. 11 and comprises two cells 54 for receiving and wedging a pair of footwear, separated by a partial partition 55.
  • the width (thickness) of the partitioning 55 and that of the two cells 54 are advantageously calculated so that during stacking the packages overlap, blister against blister, one of the shells of a blister penetrating the interval between two blister shells opposite. This provides excellent lateral wedging and stacking or palletizing of reduced dimensions.
  • the bottom 51 is shaped so as to constitute two housings 56 cooperating in the closed position of the assembly with the housings 54 of the part 50, and separated by a partial partitioning 57 opposite the partitioning 55.
  • Fig. 16 illustrates the manner in which the parts 50, 51 can fit together in the closed position.
  • Part 51 is provided on its periphery with a recess 58 capable of engaging in a projection 59 formed at the periphery of part 50, the assembly being wedged by the elasticity of the thermoplastic material.
  • Fig. 17 illustrates the junction between the parts 50, 51 produced in a single sheet of material constituting the flexible bridging 60 along one of the sides of the packaging.
  • This flexible bridging 60 forms an elastic fold ensuring automatic opening of the packaging as soon as the edges of the parts 50 and 51 are separated.
  • the assembly 50-51 thus forms a carrying and presentation case and can also advantageously constitute a storage unit for footwear at home.
  • This embodiment can also include protuberances or interior bosses, as in the packaging of FIG. 11, to ensure better timing and allow accommodation in a package of given dimensions of a range of sizes.
  • the invention is obviously not limited to the embodiments shown and described above, but on the contrary covers all variants, in particular those concerning the shape of the support base of the shoe compartment (s) and that of the associated covering element as well as those relating to the combination of some or all of these three fundamental elements in a single piece fulfilling several functions.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Packaging Of Annular Or Rod-Shaped Articles, Wearing Apparel, Cassettes, Or The Like (AREA)
  • Packages (AREA)
EP81450005A 1980-04-10 1981-04-10 Verpackungstyp für Schuhe Withdrawn EP0038770A1 (de)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
FR8008346 1980-04-10
FR8008346A FR2480249A1 (fr) 1980-04-10 1980-04-10 Nouveau type de conditionnement en particulier pour chaussures
FR8022343A FR2491887A2 (fr) 1980-10-14 1980-10-14 Nouveau type de conditionnement en particulier pour chaussures
FR8022343 1980-10-14

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0038770A1 true EP0038770A1 (de) 1981-10-28

Family

ID=26221711

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP81450005A Withdrawn EP0038770A1 (de) 1980-04-10 1981-04-10 Verpackungstyp für Schuhe

Country Status (1)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0038770A1 (de)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2618416A1 (fr) * 1987-07-20 1989-01-27 Phoenix Sa Emballage de vente a deux compartiments
US5718331A (en) * 1996-10-07 1998-02-17 Smith; Steven Powell T-shirt storage and display apparatus
US5740959A (en) * 1992-08-21 1998-04-21 Savage; Tommy R. Pre-wrapped gift package
US5836508A (en) * 1995-05-15 1998-11-17 Savage; Tommy R. Pre-wrapped gift box
FR2763574A1 (fr) * 1997-05-21 1998-11-27 Sarl Collections Procede de presentation de chaussures et dispositif pour la mise en oeuvre de ce procede
DE10163265A1 (de) * 2001-12-21 2003-07-03 Giesecke & Devrient Gmbh Wertdokument und Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Prüfung des Wertdokuments
US7581643B2 (en) * 2005-02-24 2009-09-01 Nike, Inc. System and method for footwear packaging
CN109483955A (zh) * 2018-12-27 2019-03-19 深圳市裕同包装科技股份有限公司 一种装吸塑托贴内衬纸的装置及方法

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB336215A (en) * 1928-10-22 1930-09-25 Frieda Schaefer Improvements in or relating to a device for the storage of shoes
US2359372A (en) * 1943-10-18 1944-10-03 Leader Sophie Dustproof shoe bag
US2780260A (en) * 1953-06-10 1957-02-05 Isabella J Watson Shoe bag
GB1081502A (en) * 1965-02-13 1967-08-31 Hoefliger & Karg O H G Reclosable transparent moulded container
US3369660A (en) * 1967-06-01 1968-02-20 Robert G. Hartman Display package for footwear or other articles
US3397771A (en) * 1965-07-28 1968-08-20 American Mach & Foundry Container
US3437199A (en) * 1968-02-12 1969-04-08 Anderson Bros Mfg Co Container with self-closing cover
NL7015642A (de) * 1970-10-26 1972-04-28
DE2557540A1 (de) * 1975-12-19 1977-06-30 Schneider Max Transportbehaelter

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB336215A (en) * 1928-10-22 1930-09-25 Frieda Schaefer Improvements in or relating to a device for the storage of shoes
US2359372A (en) * 1943-10-18 1944-10-03 Leader Sophie Dustproof shoe bag
US2780260A (en) * 1953-06-10 1957-02-05 Isabella J Watson Shoe bag
GB1081502A (en) * 1965-02-13 1967-08-31 Hoefliger & Karg O H G Reclosable transparent moulded container
US3397771A (en) * 1965-07-28 1968-08-20 American Mach & Foundry Container
US3369660A (en) * 1967-06-01 1968-02-20 Robert G. Hartman Display package for footwear or other articles
US3437199A (en) * 1968-02-12 1969-04-08 Anderson Bros Mfg Co Container with self-closing cover
NL7015642A (de) * 1970-10-26 1972-04-28
DE2557540A1 (de) * 1975-12-19 1977-06-30 Schneider Max Transportbehaelter

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2618416A1 (fr) * 1987-07-20 1989-01-27 Phoenix Sa Emballage de vente a deux compartiments
US5740959A (en) * 1992-08-21 1998-04-21 Savage; Tommy R. Pre-wrapped gift package
US5836508A (en) * 1995-05-15 1998-11-17 Savage; Tommy R. Pre-wrapped gift box
US5718331A (en) * 1996-10-07 1998-02-17 Smith; Steven Powell T-shirt storage and display apparatus
FR2763574A1 (fr) * 1997-05-21 1998-11-27 Sarl Collections Procede de presentation de chaussures et dispositif pour la mise en oeuvre de ce procede
DE10163265A1 (de) * 2001-12-21 2003-07-03 Giesecke & Devrient Gmbh Wertdokument und Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Prüfung des Wertdokuments
US7581643B2 (en) * 2005-02-24 2009-09-01 Nike, Inc. System and method for footwear packaging
CN109483955A (zh) * 2018-12-27 2019-03-19 深圳市裕同包装科技股份有限公司 一种装吸塑托贴内衬纸的装置及方法
CN109483955B (zh) * 2018-12-27 2024-05-31 深圳市裕同包装科技股份有限公司 一种装吸塑托贴内衬纸的装置及方法

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